July 9th, 2014 Up Close with Top VC Nikhil Kalghatgi

The venue was just perfect for a meetup that promises to tell us what we need to know about venture capital. Eyes squinting above Grove Street, this blogger walked down a dark basement, which took him into a tiny, cavernous bar that was almost claustrophic. For atmosphere, the host meetup group, Phat Startup, got it right. It was like going to a meeting of The Fight Club with Nikhil Kalghatgi telling us the rules.

It turned out to be a fun talk with the charismatic VC of Vast Ventures whose portfolio companies have included ZocDoc, OpenX, Quigo, Fab, Sweetgreen and many more.

“Have you played poker? “Kalghatgi begins his talk. “The game starts before the first cards are dealt.” It turns out where you sit matters. “If you really don't know where to sit, you have lost already.”

What is he trying to say? “Think of being the entrepreneur as the new person entering a poker room. Some tables will be easy, some will be hard. But either you’ll win and take an entire small table of investors’ money or walk away empty handed having to seek another table.”

Investors’ impression of whether you are the winner or not happens pretty quick:

“You have to have the appearance of momentum.”

In his talk, Kalghatgi went on his own momentum, taking us into the VC mind.

Three things you need to make sure you know when talking to a VC: Your team, your market, your traction.

· Team is “squishiest” of them all

· If your market is less than a billion, don't ask for investment, that’s not VC business

· Traction can be misleading. The only traction that matters for me is revenue numbers

Create momentum in your fundraising. Don’t take meetings sequentially, book all of them as close together as possible. As for number of meetings, he agreed what an audience suggested: 100 meetings in 30 days

On meeting sharing decks

If they ask for a deck, send them the deck, but use watermarks or tracking systems.

How to best manage VCs:

The best thing to do is under-sell but over-deliver.

Remember, it’s your show.
If you bend (to their demands) all the time, that's how they're going to treat you

He said the best people to approach for investments are rich people.

“The ultra wealthy are far more accessible than we think. Find their sweet spot. I helped their kids.” Investor sherpas are your best friend…unless they are doing it for money.

On finding rich people:

You’ve got to be where they are. Host coffee talks at Four Seasons, that will cost you 6 bucks.

On tech meetup to go to meet investors:

Best events are not posted on social media. It’s in private events.

What VCs to avoid?
If your investor takes lot of your time and they have no control, stop spending time with them.

Avoid those focused on deal terms, focus on those that are aligned with your principles and values.

What are his biases?

I have a bias for companies who can raise money easily. I have a bias toward younger entrepreneurs, and those living in cities where “business serendipity” exists

On struggling startups, he’s more circumspect

If there’s no progress, he says he digs into the problems the team faced and if reasons for failing were warranted, tells them to “re-evaluate.”

On your educational background, as asked by host James Lopez

No one really cares what school you went to, unless it’s their school.

For more info on The Phat Startup organized by Anthony Frasier and Lopez, visit http://www.thephatstartup.com/